If the air can flow enough to work your vocal cords? You are breathing. Maybe not easily, maybe you are in peril? But if you cannot breathe you also cannot talk. It's right there in the First Aid classes.
You are correct. St. Floyd was saying how he can't breathe even while sitting in the drivers seat (!) of his drug dealer's car. He was begging to lay on the ground, fighting being put in the police car. He spat out 1 of the 2 wads of drugs there, the other one got swallowed & it killed him.
Also? A few months earlier he had also OD'd on fentanyl and EMS had to revive him with that stuff they use. He was frothing at the mouth saying "I can't breathe". So much for being "a reformed drug addict: eh?
Oh, and it was almost a year that he swallowed an entire bottle of stolen opiate pills he was trying to sell to a vice sting. They drove him directly to the ER where he was administered activated charcoal then had his stomach pumped.
And he also can be seen on the security camera throwing out more drug packets from his waistband and asscrack while seated against the wall.
Ok? Passing air through your windpipe is not breathing.
A case could be make for your "last gasp"? Where you exhale the last air from your lungs but are unable to breathe in. But you'd only be able to say "I can't breathe" once. So saying it 7-8 times shows air is going in & out of your lungs, yes? What do you call air going into and out of one's lungs? Maybe... breathing?
I say, again, that restricted or difficulty breathings is a very serious condition. People will rightfully say "I can't breathe" when in that state. But you don't break out the tracheotomy knife while the person is still talking, ok?
Positional asphyxia doesn't mean you can't breathe at all, it means you just can't breathe enough. You are in fact breathing if you're talking, there's nothing else that can provide enough airflow down there but air being pulled in and pushed out of your lungs, you can't just magically expand and contract your throat like a frog to create airflow.
Now in positional asphyxiation you can breathe, so you can also talk... Barely. To indicate the possibility of positional asphyxiation in a healthy adult you would either be hearing a whispery wheeze of a voice to indicate partial airway constriction. Or talking in very short shal.. -huff- low... -huff- brea.. -huff- ..ths that can barely manage one syllable at a time, to indicate diaphragm/chest restriction. If you can project "I can't breathe!" in a way the whole room can hear then you are not in danger.
no, i am not
my father is a respiratory therapist, my god mother is an oncology nurse, I have asthma, I have worked in the UPMC BMST, look, you CAN make sounds without sufficient oxygen inhalation
Great, but when most people say breathe they mean moving air in and out of your lungs. They aren't breaking out the pulse oximeter to check if someone is getting sufficient oxygen for respiration. I think this seems to come from a misunderstanding of what the lay person means when they say breathing and confusing that with respiration.
Vocal chords require airflow to make noise, the only source of sustained airflow is from the lings, so if there's enough airflow to talk normally then you are breathing by any basic measure. Any respiratory problems after that don't count as "can't breathe" but are a separate issue.
If the air can flow enough to work your vocal cords? You are breathing. Maybe not easily, maybe you are in peril? But if you cannot breathe you also cannot talk. It's right there in the First Aid classes.
You are correct. St. Floyd was saying how he can't breathe even while sitting in the drivers seat (!) of his drug dealer's car. He was begging to lay on the ground, fighting being put in the police car. He spat out 1 of the 2 wads of drugs there, the other one got swallowed & it killed him.
Also? A few months earlier he had also OD'd on fentanyl and EMS had to revive him with that stuff they use. He was frothing at the mouth saying "I can't breathe". So much for being "a reformed drug addict: eh?
Oh, and it was almost a year that he swallowed an entire bottle of stolen opiate pills he was trying to sell to a vice sting. They drove him directly to the ER where he was administered activated charcoal then had his stomach pumped.
And he also can be seen on the security camera throwing out more drug packets from his waistband and asscrack while seated against the wall.
Oh! I forgot that one. He had a long history, eh? Obviously a role model for children everywhere, according to the left. :/
the kangarooed cop ho got stabbed was off duty security at the nightclub
You are just fucking wrong. Just because you can move air past the vocal chords does not mean you are breathing.
Ok? Passing air through your windpipe is not breathing.
A case could be make for your "last gasp"? Where you exhale the last air from your lungs but are unable to breathe in. But you'd only be able to say "I can't breathe" once. So saying it 7-8 times shows air is going in & out of your lungs, yes? What do you call air going into and out of one's lungs? Maybe... breathing?
I say, again, that restricted or difficulty breathings is a very serious condition. People will rightfully say "I can't breathe" when in that state. But you don't break out the tracheotomy knife while the person is still talking, ok?
No, you're absolutely in the wrong here.
Positional asphyxia doesn't mean you can't breathe at all, it means you just can't breathe enough. You are in fact breathing if you're talking, there's nothing else that can provide enough airflow down there but air being pulled in and pushed out of your lungs, you can't just magically expand and contract your throat like a frog to create airflow.
Now in positional asphyxiation you can breathe, so you can also talk... Barely. To indicate the possibility of positional asphyxiation in a healthy adult you would either be hearing a whispery wheeze of a voice to indicate partial airway constriction. Or talking in very short shal.. -huff- low... -huff- brea.. -huff- ..ths that can barely manage one syllable at a time, to indicate diaphragm/chest restriction. If you can project "I can't breathe!" in a way the whole room can hear then you are not in danger.
no, i am not my father is a respiratory therapist, my god mother is an oncology nurse, I have asthma, I have worked in the UPMC BMST, look, you CAN make sounds without sufficient oxygen inhalation
Great, but when most people say breathe they mean moving air in and out of your lungs. They aren't breaking out the pulse oximeter to check if someone is getting sufficient oxygen for respiration. I think this seems to come from a misunderstanding of what the lay person means when they say breathing and confusing that with respiration.
Vocal chords require airflow to make noise, the only source of sustained airflow is from the lings, so if there's enough airflow to talk normally then you are breathing by any basic measure. Any respiratory problems after that don't count as "can't breathe" but are a separate issue.